Synopses & Reviews

Publisher Comments

and#147;The big event in poetry for 2015 will likely be the long-awaited resurrection of Frank Stanford."and#151;NPR.org

and#147;What About Thisand#133; introduces to a broader audience an important and original American poet and#151; sensitive, death-haunted, surreal, carnal, dirt-flecked and deeply Southern and#151; whose promise, only partly fulfilled, it hurts to contemplate. His poems flick on a heretofore unnoticed porch light in your mind.and#8221;and#151;Dwight Garner, The New York Times

* and#8221;Stanford fearlessly explored the terror and wonder of the mind and the physical world.and#8221;and#151;Publishers Weekly, starred review

* "Highly recommended work from an American original."and#151;Library Journal, starred review

and#147;What About This marks a rare moment, when a critical and completely original American voice is recovered after decades and takes its rightful place in the canonand#133;Now that the work is finally available, the real risk is that Stanfordand#8217;s poetic legacy will play second fiddle to the myth of his life and death. The beautiful young suicide is a hard narrative to shakeand#133;.What About This offers the fullness of both the work and the image, and leaves it to readers to decide what they will value most.and#8221;and#151;Jay Deshpande, The New Republic

"This vibrant volume forms a comprehensive selection from his huge output, and includes published and unpublished poetry and prose, archival photographs, original manuscripts, a rejection letter, an interview, and excerpts from the 'ungovernable' fifteen-thousand-line epic poem, 'The Battlefield Where the Moon Says I Love You'...Stanfordand#8217;s poems are by turns earthly and visionary."and#151;The New Yorker

and#147;The big event in poetry for 2015 will likely be the long-awaited resurrection of Frank Stanford, a legendary badass from Arkansas, much of whose poetry has been unavailable since his suicide at the age of 29 in 1978and#133; Stanford was a hell of a metaphor-maker and simile-slinger, and could cast a spell of extreme intensity with a flick of his wrist.and#8221;and#151;NPR.org

"The book [What About This], layered with north Delta dialect and superstition, departs again and again on dream-like thought sequences in which unpredictable imagery continually startles the imagination and overwhelms it with visceral beauty."and#151;Matthew Henricksen, Arkansas Times

and#147;Frank Stanford's What About This is a monumental achievement. So much of Stanford's work was unpublished, scattered about in limited-edition, hard-to-find volumes, but now it has been collected and readers will rejoice to discover (or rediscover) a distinct poetic voiceand#133;. He was a voracious reader and was heavily influenced by Thomas Merton and French writers. He loved the Surrealists and Rimbaud, Mallarme, Follain and the French filmmakers Cocteau and Buand#241;uel. His poetry is wildly imagistic, imbued with Southern folklore and culture, and it'sand#151;to use Stanford's own wordand#151;and#145;strange.and#8217;"and#151;Tom Lavoie, Shelf Awareness

"Stanford was a teenage prodigy out of Arkansas bleeding beautiful streams of Faulkner-like fever dream that has survived mostly in out-of-print chapbooks passed hand-to-hand. Now a monster compilation, 'What About This: Collected Poems of Frank Stanford,' has assembled more than 700 pages of poetry and a little prose like a moon-spattered Bible."and#151;Dean Kuipers, Los Angeles Times

"The work of poet Frank Stanford, whose turbulent life ended in suicide, is experiencing a well-deserved renaissance."and#151;Mary Ann Gwinn, Seattle Times

As Dean Young writes in the Foreword to the book: "Many of these poems seem as if they were written with a burnt stick. With blood in river mud... Frank Stanford, demonically prolific, approaches the poem not as an exercise of rhetoric or a puzzle of signifiers but as a man 'looking for his own tongue' in a knife-fight with a ghost."

Synopsis

Readers have dreamed about this collection for nearly four decades--an energized presentation of Frank Stanford's raw-genius ungovernable oeuvre.